Group Health Insurance Calculator — Estimate Employer & Employee Costs for 2026
Group health planning usually starts with one question: Can we afford a plan our employees will actually use? That is exactly what this calculator helps answer. It is built for employers who want a realistic first-pass budget before they request formal quotes. Instead of waiting until the end of the process to understand the monthly impact, you can model likely employer and employee costs now using the same practical inputs buyers care about most: headcount, expected participation, average age, ZIP, contribution level, plan type, and optional add-on benefits.
This is not a filed-rate quote tool, and it is not trying to be. It is a planning tool. That distinction matters. In the small-group market, exact rates depend on the carrier, network, state rules, plan selection, effective date, and your actual census. But employers still need a strong budgeting framework before they get that far. They need to know whether a 50% employer contribution is enough, whether an HDHP/HSA setup creates a better budget lane than a PPO, whether participation assumptions feel realistic, and whether adding dental or vision still keeps the plan within reach. This calculator gives you that structure so you can move from “maybe” to a numbers-based strategy.
Model the budget first. Then upload your census for exact quotes.
Why this calculator matters before you shop live plans
Most small employers do not begin by asking for a specific carrier. They start with budget design. How much should the company contribute? How many employees will likely enroll? Will richer coverage actually be appreciated, or would a leaner plan plus employer support deliver a better outcome? Those questions are easier to answer when you can test a few realistic scenarios before you quote.
Helpful reality check: small employers generally are not subject to the employer shared responsibility payment, and SHOP guidance still points most buyers to the 1–50 employee range, with participation and contribution rules varying by state and carrier. Use this tool to set direction, then confirm the market details with live quotes.
Inputs we use so the estimate stays transparent
Every planning assumption is visible. You can change the levers and rerun the estimate in seconds.
| Input | What it means | Best practice |
|---|---|---|
| Eligible employees | How many employees qualify for the offer | Use true eligibility, not total payroll headcount |
| Participation % | How many eligible employees you expect to enroll | Use realistic take-up and remember valid waivers are treated differently than rejections |
| Average age | Average age of likely enrollees | Use your best estimate now; the full census refines this later |
| Industry | Directional utilization pattern by employer type | Choose the closest operational category |
| Coverage level | Basic, standard, or comprehensive budget shape | Match this to recruiting goals and employee expectations |
| ZIP | Regional cost proxy | Use the primary business ZIP where the group is based |
| Employer contribution % | What the employer pays toward employee-only premium | Start with a level you can sustain through renewals |
| Plan preference | HMO, EPO, PPO, or HDHP/HSA planning track | Use HDHP/HSA when budget control matters and you want HSA strategy on the table |
| Add-ons | Directional budget adders for optional benefits | Use for planning first, then confirm availability and pricing by market |
Interactive group health insurance calculator
Use this for budgeting. For exact rates, plan designs, carrier rules, and participation confirmation, upload your census after you run the scenario.
How the estimator works
This model gives you a directional budget, not a quote. It is intentionally simple enough to be useful early, but detailed enough to help you compare scenarios that matter. Headcount and participation drive the enrolled population. Age, industry, and ZIP influence the per-employee planning cost. Coverage level and plan type adjust the benefit richness. Employer contribution then splits the cost between company and employee.
| Factor | How it affects cost | Estimator treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Headcount & participation | Higher enrollment increases total spend but can reduce planning volatility per enrolled employee | Enrolled employees = eligible × participation % |
| Average age | Older groups generally trend higher than younger groups | Uses a directional age-band factor |
| Industry | Utilization patterns differ across workforces | Uses category-based planning multipliers |
| Coverage level | Richer plan design usually means higher spend | Applies standard/comprehensive richness multipliers plus optional riders |
| Region (ZIP) | Local market conditions and network density affect pricing direction | Uses a regional cost proxy based on ZIP |
| Employer share | Changes how cost is split between employer and employee | Displays both monthly and annual budget impact |
Planning tip: run a conservative scenario first with stronger participation and a slightly older enrollee mix, then run an optimistic scenario. That gives you a practical budget range before you quote.
How to optimize employer spend without gutting the benefit
Employers usually get the best long-term result when the plan is both affordable and usable. A benefit that looks cheap on paper but frustrates employees rarely performs well at renewal. A benefit that is overly rich for the workforce can create avoidable budget pressure. The middle ground usually comes from plan design discipline, not guesswork.
Group health “near me” — service areas
This calculator is national in scope, but live plan availability and rules depend on the state and market. We support group health planning and quote comparisons across our licensed states.
| Licensed states | City highlights |
|---|---|
| AZ, AL, TX, CA, NY, OH, FL, NC, VA, GA, OK, NM, IA, KS, MI, NE, SC, SD, WV | Phoenix, Tucson • Birmingham, Mobile • Houston, Dallas • Los Angeles, San Diego • New York City, Buffalo • Miami, Tampa • Charlotte, Raleigh • Richmond, Virginia Beach • Atlanta • Oklahoma City • Albuquerque • Des Moines • Kansas City • Detroit • Omaha • Charleston (SC) • Sioux Falls • Charleston (WV) |
Group health insurance calculator FAQs
What size counts as a “small group”?
In many markets, small group generally means 1 to 50 employees, though some state frameworks can differ. Eligibility details also depend on how the market counts employees and whether the group meets carrier rules.
How much does the employer usually have to contribute?
Many conversations begin around 50% of the employee-only premium, but exact minimum contribution requirements vary by carrier and state. Use this calculator to test the budget range first, then confirm exact rules with live quotes.
Is there a participation requirement?
Often yes. SHOP guidance commonly points to a 70% minimum participation rate, though some states have different requirements and employees with other qualifying coverage are usually treated differently than standard declinations.
Can we add dental and vision?
Yes. Dental and vision can often be added as embedded or stand-alone options. This calculator uses directional adders for planning, then live quotes confirm the actual pricing and availability.
Why might exact quotes differ from this estimate?
Exact quotes use filed rates, your full census, real plan designs, carrier network options, effective date timing, and state-specific market rules. This tool is intentionally a budgeting model, not a quote engine.
Independent agency: Blake Insurance Group LLC helps employers compare group health options, contributions, and enrollment paths based on census data and market availability.
Estimate disclosure: This calculator is a planning tool only and not an offer of coverage. Actual premiums, participation rules, and eligibility depend on filed rates, your exact census, selected plan designs, carrier requirements, and state regulations.
Tax credit / alternative funding note: Some small employers may also compare SHOP tax-credit eligibility or defined-contribution approaches such as ICHRA or QSEHRA. Those options should be reviewed separately based on workforce size and employer goals.
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